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[The apartment is quiet, the only sound in the place is the stove and the bubbling water. Y/N leans against the kitchen counter, waiting for ramen noodles to boil, wearing sweatpants and a T-shirt]
[The sound of the front door click. Nemuri walks in, clearly tired. Y/N hears a heavy sighâthe kind that sounds like she just really need to drop onto a couchâNemuri then falls herself into the armchair, kicking off her boots]
M!Reader : ...I'll let her change first...
[A few minutes later, shuffling footsteps right behind him. Nemuri isn't wearing her Midnight gear, just wearing her oversized clothes and lounge shorts]
[Nemuri sees himâwithout a word, stumbles forward, throwing her arms around his waist from behind, and resting her chin on his shoulder]
[Nemuri let out a loong groan]
Nemuri : Too tired...
[Nemuri rubs her head against his neck]
Nemuri : I took down four villains, filled paperwork, and sat through a staff meeting... I'm obligated to do this to you...
M!Reader : Chuckles, no energy for anything, huh?
Nemuri : ...I mean, not if it comes to ******* right now...
M!Reader blushing : ..Whaâi meant that as inânevermind...
drew neither of those other options instead i chose peak !
i got an itch.. blank stare drool emoji
@black-and-yellow 's loudspeaker au !! super awesome make sure to check it out.. giggle
Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
â Live Streamingâ Interactive Chatâ Private Showsâ HD Qualityâ Free Actions
Free to watch ⢠No registration required ⢠HD streaming
Warning: Extreme Angst, Comfort, family issues. Found Family. Gn reader Wc: 3.8k
Guidance Counselor Midnight, who knows the sound of your footsteps by heart.
Youâve walked this hallway too many times, enough for her to recognize the rhythm of your steps before you even reach the door.
Today, they sound heavier, slowerâlike your body is carrying a weight too great for one person to bear.
Nemuri stops typing mid-sentence, her breath catching just slightly. She steels herself, sitting up straighter, smoothing the front of her blouse.
She hopesâpraysâthat maybe, just maybe, you have good news this time. That today wonât be like all the other days where she watches you sink deeper into something neither of you have the power to control.
You werenât always like this.
The first time you came to her office, three years ago, you sat in the corner of the waiting room, head bowed, hands frantically scribbling answers onto a crumpled worksheet, trying to finish before Aizawa finished speaking.
You hadnât wanted to be there. Not really.
You didnât come from a place that believed in this sort of thingâtherapy, guidance, help. In your world, struggle was something to be endured, not spoken about. Problems werenât things you solved with a conversation; they were things you got over.
Nemuri had seen it before, but something about you stuck with her.
Aizawa had meant well, sending you to her. He saw your walls, the way youâd built them brick by brick, shutting out anyone who tried to get too close. He knew he couldnât give you the time and space you neededânot with so many students to look afterâso he handed you off to someone who could. Someone he trusted.
And so, for months, she was just a name in your inbox. A quiet presence in the background of your life, checking in with casual emails, keeping the door open for you to walk through when you were ready.
And eventually, you did.
Now, three years later, sheâs the only one you let see the cracks.
She watches as you walk through the door, shoulders hunched, hands tucked into the pockets of your jacketâprobably clutching one of those little rocks you always carry. There are always rocks. Smooth river stones, jagged crystals, tiny pebbles with chipped edges. Sheâs never asked why, but she imagines they must bring you comfort. A weight in your hands when the weight in your chest becomes unbearable.
You sit down in the waiting room, quiet. You used to be a little ball of light, someone who found joy in the small things, who gifted her handmade cards on holidays and birthdays, carefully decorated with stickers and intricate little doodles. She still has them all, tucked away in her desk, tear-stained from the nights she sat at home, reading and rereading your words, wishing she could fix things for you.
But that light in you has dimmed.
Youâre struggling. Youâre drowning, and she doesnât know how to pull you back to shore.
School is hard, but thatâs not whatâs breaking you. Not really. Itâs home. The place that was once your foundation, your support system, has become something suffocating. The weight of expectation, of culture, of disappointmentâitâs pressing down on you from all sides.
And thereâs no escape, no dorm room to retreat to, because you lost your job and canât afford to move out. Your student refund barely covers transportation, and the schools near your parentsâ house wouldnât pay for your tuition the way this one does.
Youâre stuck.
And the comments at homeâthose sharp, cutting remarks disguised as concernâdonât help. The whispers of youâre not trying hard enough, youâre lazy, you should be better than this. They seep into your skin like poison, and she can see the way theyâve begun to take.
She doesnât know what to do anymore.
But for thirty minutes a week, she can offer you something no one else does.
Peace.
So she takes a breath, pastes on a gentle smile, and calls your nameâsoft, warm, careful. You lift your head, eyes tired, body worn, and shuffle into her office. She closes the door behind you, shutting out the world for just a little while.
Because here, in this space, you donât have to carry everything alone.
Nemuri watches you settle into the chair across from her, and despite the lighthearted smile she flashes, she can already tellâthis is going to be one of those talks.
You start with the good things, like you always do. Itâs a habit, trying to soften the blow, trying to convince yourself that everything isnât as heavy as it feels. You tell her about something funny that happened in class, or a random cat you saw on the way here. She listens, nods, lets you have that space. But then, the shift comes. Your voice gets quieter, the air feels heavier, and she watches your hands fidget with the hem of your sleeve, picking at loose threads like theyâre holding all your stress.
Youâre tired.Â
Not the kind of tired that a full nightâs sleep could fixâif you were even getting those to begin withâbut the kind of tired thatâs been sitting in your bones for almost two years now. You tell her about the missed math classes, not because you donât care, but because sometimes getting to class feels impossible.Â
Transportation is a mess, and last week you were out with the flu, which only put you further behind. Youâve already failed two exams.
You know how bad that is, how it puts your financial aid on the line.
You know, and yet, fixing it feels like climbing an endless mountain with bricks strapped to your back.
Youâve been looking for another job. You canât find one. You donât even have time for one. But you miss working, because having your own money felt better than having to ask for it, knowing there were always invisible strings attached. That sense of control, of independenceâitâs gone, and the absence of it stings.
Your hands tighten in your lap, and Nemuri doesnât say anything yet. She just listens.
Then, you talk about your family. And this, this is where she really feels the weight of it. She already knowsâsheâs known for a long time nowâbut hearing you say it makes her want to shake someone, to hold you, to do something. The mixed messages, the constant expectations pressing down on you until you feel like you canât breathe. Your parents think theyâre helping, but all theyâre doing is making you feel like youâre running a race with no finish line.
And youâre exhausted.
Sheâs noticed the way your energy has dipped, how you come to school but donât really seem there. How your hair has been in the same style for weeks, and she knowsâshe knows that means something deeper. You always used to switch it up, experiment, take pride in it. Now, itâs just one more thing that feels like too much.
Depression does that. It creeps into the small things first, turning basic tasks into battles. She knows youâre still washing your clothes, still putting effort into dressing yourself, but she also knows thatâs one of the last things standing between you and the void.
Sheâs scared for you.
You tell her about the fights at home. How they used to roll off your back, how you used to just push things down, but now⌠now youâre holding onto them. The pressure is too much, the cracks are showing, and you donât know where to put it all. You know bottling it up isnât safe, but in your household, keeping quiet is the only way to survive.
Nemuri grips the underneath of her desk, nails pressing into the wood.
She knows you need to get out. The longer you stay in that environment, the harder it will be to crawl your way out of this fog.
You miss the things you used to love. You still have writing, still have fanfiction as an escape, but everything else feels impossible. The burnout is crushing, suffocating, and the major you choseâone you refuse to back down fromâonly adds to the weight.
She knows you arenât asking her to fix it. You know she canât.
But that doesnât stop her from thinking about you late at night, staring at the ceiling and wondering what else she can do. Because she cares. More than she probably should. And sheâs scared that one day, youâll hit a breaking point you canât come back from.
The familiar scent of her jasmine tea fills the air, but it does little to settle the weight in your chest. Her office is warmâcozy in a way that most school offices arenât. The walls are lined with books, framed photos, and awards, but your eyes keep drifting to the small, well-loved cat plushie on her shelf. The one you gave her a year ago as a valentine, telling her it reminded you of herâsoft but a little mischievous. She had laughed, promised to take care of it, and now it sits proudly beside her plaques and certificates because it belongs there.
You wish you felt like you belonged somewhere too.
âI mean, they still let me stay at home,â you say, but it doesnât sound like much of a comfort. You let the words hang in the air for a moment, then sigh, bracing yourself for what comes next. Nemuri leans in slightly, careful not to push but making sure you know sheâs listening.Â
âBut?â
You exhale slowly. You never cry in publicâeverâbut you trust her enough to let yourself unravel, just a little.
She remembers the first time it happened, how you had been talking about school and home and how you felt less than. She hated it. Hated how your bright smileâthe smile that lit up the room, the smile that was often the highlight of her and the other staffâs dayâhad started to disappear.
She knows your parents love you. She truly believes that. Sheâs seen it beforeâthe way they call you randomly just to check in, the times they tell you thereâs food at home and that they love you. Sheâs seen them at your award ceremonies and community events, pride in their eyes. There is love there.
But youâre all too close, too tangled up in each otherâs expectations and disappointments, and none of that love is being seen or communicated properly.
âWell,â you start, voice quieter now, âMy dad was offering me dinner the other night, and inside, I was like, âOh cool, he loves me.â And of course, he does, but I was still reeling from the therapist stuff, yâknow? And then he justâcasuallyâstarts talking about me self-isolating in my room and how he shouldnât have to take my devicesââ
Nemuri frowns. âWas this when you texted me?â
âYeah, they cut my WiFi and took everything but my phone.â
She raises an eyebrow. âDo you know how it still had cellular?â
âNope.â
Her lips press into a thin line. She can agree with consequences, sureâbut youâre too old to be treated like a young teenager. Too aware of whatâs happening to be punished into submission.
âSo, he was going on about that,â you continue, fingers picking at a loose thread on your sleeve, âAnd inside, I was just like, âI donât wanna hear this. I canât take it.â And thenââ
You swallow hard.Â
âThen he says to me that he just accepts that he wonât have peace in his life or house until I move out.â
Her stomach drops.
She watches you carefully as you speak, as you try to hold yourself together, but she can see how much those words cut you open. You donât even realize how much your hands are shaking.
You keep talking, explaining how after that, you barely wanted to eat. How the food didnât even taste like anything. How later, your parents decided they werenât going to give you a ride to school anymore on your dadâs way to workâbecause, in their words, you hadnât been doing anything to justify it.
Nemuri clenches her jaw. She knows how far you live. Knows dorming might be too expensive. Knows youâre backed into a corner.
Then you say itâyour voice breaking just slightly, eyes glassy.
"Iâm scared theyâll be happier without me and not want me to move back."
Nemuri feels like the wind has been knocked out of her.
She sees how much this is weighing on youâthe way your siblings are already asking if youâre going to leave, how your mom wants you out. Youâre afraid your stuff will get thrown away because you wonât be able to take everything with you.
She grips your hand. âDorming isnât year-round. What will you do if they donât want you back?â
And you smile. That tired, knowing smile that makes her heart ache.
âI donât know.â
The words are quiet. Defeated.
You look at her with glassy eyes, and the floodgates open. You explain how you feel like no one wants youâhow you want to stay, but they want you gone. How they tell you that you wonât make it on your own but then turn around and say that youâre strong and that they can see youâre breakingâbut the only way to fix it is to submit.
To them. To religion.
To everything youâve already been suffocating under.
And thatâs just the tip of the iceberg.
Thereâs so much more. So much you donât even have the energy to put into words. But she knows because you text her updates. She talks to your favorite professor.Â
Nemuri doesnât realize sheâs gripping your hand a little too tightly until she sees you rubbing your thumb absentmindedly over the back of hers. A small gesture. A grounding one.
She exhales slowly, forcing herself to focus. She doesnât want to cry, doesnât want to scare you with her anger, doesnât want to make this about her. Even if she would like to slap your old therapist.Â
So Nemuri asks, carefully, âWhat do you want to do?â
Because youâre miserable at home. Youâre miserable at school. And if you donât do something, she knows youâll regret it in the spring.
She watches as you try to come up with an answer, but youâre exhausted. She can see it in your slumped posture, the way you keep rubbing your temples, the way your lips part and close again like youâre trying to find the right words but keep coming up empty.
She glances toward her shelf, where the small cat plushie sitsâsquished and a little worn but still standing tall next to her awards. She thinks about the way you had given it to her with a grin, how you had laughed when she immediately named it something ridiculous.
She misses that smile.
And for the first time in a while, she realizes that you probably do too.
You wipe at your face, sniffling as you try to collect yourself. "I think Iâll just have to talk to them again about moving onto campus," you say, voice small. "Probably have to take out another loan."
Nemuri nods, but sheâs studying your face, and she sees the way your shoulders sag, how your fingers tighten around the fabric of your sleeve like youâre holding yourself together by a thread.
She tilts her head. "Whatâs wrong?"
You shake your head at first, but then you let out a shuddering breath and stare at your hands.Â
"I feel like a monster."Â
Nemuriâs brows knit together, concern flooding her face, but you press on before she can speak.
"I ruined everything," you say, voice cracking.Â
"I knowânot everything can be my fault. You and my new therapist have told me that. But holy shit, itâs so hard to feel that way. I feel like Iâll never live outside the shadow of my past. My mistakes are just hanging over my headâ"
You try to take a deep breath, try to steady yourself, but something shifts inside you.
Your chest tightens, and suddenly, your vision blurs. You donât even realize how wide your eyes have gone until the first gasp for air tears through you.
And then you just cry.
Itâs not quiet. Itâs not controlled. Itâs not one of those times where you blink away the tears and pretend youâre fine. Itâs raw. Ugly. A choked-out mess of grief and exhaustion.
And then you hear her sniffle.
Through the haze of your own tears, you see Nemuriâs eyes glossing over, her lips pressed together in a trembling line as she tries and fails to keep it together.
Because she doesnât understand.
She doesnât understand how anyone could look at their struggling childâsee them drowning, see them breaking apartâand still say such terrible things. How they could watch you pull away, see the changes in your personality, see the light dim in your eyes, and think that kicking you out is the answer. How they could dismiss the weight of their words, brush off your pain, make you feel so small.
Maybe they donât know theyâre being abusive. Maybe they think theyâre doing whatâs right.
But youâve told them. Youâve told them so many times when they hurt your feelings. Youâve tried to make them see.
And still, they call you too sensitive. A snowflake.
She doesnât hesitateâshe pulls you in.
Warm. Steady. Safe.
She smells like good soap and elderberries, like the cranberry wine she swears by, like the dark chocolate she keeps hidden in her desk. But itâs not just that. Itâs the way her arms wrap around you, firm but gentle, the way she doesnât say anything, doesnât try to fix it, just holds you.
Because she knows.
She knows sheâs the only one you can come to with your heavy heart. The only one who gets the whole truth. The only one who listens without conditions.
And as you bury your face into her shoulder, tears soaking into the soft fabric of her blouse, you let yourself believeâjust for a momentâthat you are not alone.
The two of you stay wrapped in each otherâs arms for a long time, the weight of the moment settling between you like a quiet understanding. Your breath hitches as you press your face into the warmth of her shoulder, and Nemuriâs own shoulders shake as she holds you just a little tighter.
Neither of you speakâthereâs nothing to say yet, just the shared grief of knowing that some things cannot be undone, only endured.
Eventually, you feel her pat your back in that reassuring way of hers, and you sniffle as you finally sit up. Your head feels heavy, your throat raw, but Nemuri doesnât let go of your hand. Instead, she rolls backward in her chair, still holding onto you with her left hand as she grabs a box of tissues with her right.
"Here, sweetheart," she murmurs, passing you several tissues before taking off her glasses and dabbing at her own wet lashes. You wipe your face, trying to breathe through the remnants of your tears as she steadies herself. Then, she looks at you with all the certainty in the world and says,Â
"You are NOT a monster."
You shake your head weakly, but she wonât have any of that.
"You are kind," she continues, voice firm. "You are strong. And I know this because Iâve seen it."
She grips your hand a little tighter, grounding you.
"Iâve seen how you check in on the people around you, how even when youâre struggling, you still have it in you to careâgenuinely. You succeed when you put your mind to it. You may be shy, but you have never let that stop you from being kind. I remember the time you complimented that girl wearing the same sweater as you as she was being loaded into an ambulance. The time you thought a student had jumped from the roof, and you pushed through the crowd to help, even though you had no idea what you were walking into. Even if it meant you might get traumatized, you still went forward. Because you just⌠you want people to have another chance."
Her endless blue eyes lock onto yours, full of conviction. You swallow thickly, unable to look away.
"I would never sugarcoat something for you," she says softly. "I would never lead you astray."
You nod, waiting for her to continue, because somehow you know she has something important to say next.
And then she says it.
"You have to get out of there."
The words settle deep into your bones.
She squeezes your hands tighter. "I will do everything in my power to help you, okay? I need you to know that. Iâm glad youâre here. You matter. You have a purpose." Her voice wavers slightly.Â
"And I love you very much."
Your chest tightens, but this time, it isnât just grief or exhaustionâitâs something else. Something warm.
Something that makes you feel seen.
Nemuri gives you a small, wobbly smile of hers and whispers,
"Sometimes, family is tough. And not all family is blood. Sometimes, we find our family."
You take a shaky breath and nod, gripping her hands like a lifeline.
"I love you too," you whisper.
She smiles, eyes glistening.
You sniffle and clear your throat. "I⌠I have to do whatâs best for me. I donât want to get hurt anymoreânot emotionally, not mentally."
She sighs softly, but itâs not disappointmentâitâs relief. "Okay, sweetie." She cups your cheek for a second, her thumb brushing gently over your skin before she pulls back. "I just worry, you know? You get into your head sometimes." You huff out a weak, teary laugh.Â
"Yeah⌠I do."
"Just⌠promise me youâll stay above water for me, okay?" she says, tapping your hand lightly. "At least until spring break. Then weâll figure something more permanent out."
You nod, inhaling deeply, feeling just a little bit lighter.Â
"I promise."
"Good." She leans back and reaches for something on her desk, then holds it out to youâa small container of blueberries. "Want some?"
You shake your head, smiling faintly. "Iâm good, but thanks."
She nods and stands up, stretching slightly. "Alright, then. Get your coat on, sweetheart. Itâs cold out, and I want you to get some fresh air before heading back." You grab your coat and slip it on, and as soon as youâre ready, you link your arm with hers. The receptionist at the front desk smiles at the two of you as you walk out.Â
"Stay safe, you two!"
Nemuri waves, and you nod in acknowledgment as the cold air hits your face. But somehow, it doesnât feel quite as heavy anymore.
Because sometimes, sheâs the only person who gives you a hug all week. Sometimes, sheâs the only one who says something encouraging.
Sometimes, you think of her as a mom.
Which is strange, because Nemuri doesnât have kids. Not many would call her âmotherlyâ at first glance. And you aren't trying to replace your own mother.
But sheâs so kind.
So warm and lovely.Â
âŚMaybe itâs because you miss your mom right now.
But that canât be fixed.Â
Not now. Maybe never.Â
So instead, you focus on thisâon walking arm-in-arm with her for these next twenty minutes, on holding onto this small, good moment with everything you have.
The winter sun hits your face and she pulls her hair into her hood to keep it from becoming too wild in the wind. She's gotten new purple highlights and you ADORE them. You sometimes wobble when you walk and she adores that too.
Because Nemuri lives in the garden of your heart.
And you know, without a doubt, that she has a picture of you in hers.
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